This head-rest is essentially characterized in that the electric motors for actuating in height and in inclination as well as the positioning transmission chains which are respectively associated therewith, are housed in a casing itself mounted inside the head-rest. The electrical connections to these motors end at a connector adapted to be plugged into a connection base fixed permanently to the upper portion of the back-rest of the seat.

Patent
   5222784
Priority
Jul 30 1990
Filed
Jul 29 1991
Issued
Jun 29 1993
Expiry
Jul 29 2011
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
55
6
EXPIRED
1. An electrical head-rest, particularly for vehicle seats, comprising:
a cushion holder housing;
a removable fastening means extending from said cushion holder housing and having standard separation sliding pins for enabling mounting of said cushion holder housing on an upper portion of a back-rest of a seat;
a respective guide rod secured to an associated said pin in said cushion holder housing;
a support base in said cushion holder housing and to which is attached said cushion holder housing, said support base and hence said cushion holder housing being slidably mounted on said guide rods;
a first electric motor mounted to said support base in said cushion holder housing, said first electric motor including a vertically extending shaft;
a first transition chain in said cushion holder housing associated with said vertically extending shaft of said first electric motor for positioning said support base and hence said cushion holder housing relative to said sliding pins upon actuation of said first electric motor;
a connection base fixed permanently to the upper portion of the back-rest;
a first electrical connection for electrically connecting said at least one electric motor to said connection base, said electrical connection including a connector which is received by said connection base; and
actuating members associated with the seat within reach of the hands of an occupant of the seat, said actuating members being electrically connected with said connection base by a second electrical connection whereby the upper portion of the back-rest only contains the second electrical connection which extends between said connection base and said actuating members.
2. An electrical head-rest as claimed in claim 1 wherein said first transition chain includes a screw-nut system and associated gears, a screw of said screw nut system extending vertically and being located centrally between said guide rods.
3. An electrical head-rest as claimed in claim 2 and further comprising a second electric motor having a horizontally extending shaft mounted in said cushion holder housing beneath said support base to said guide pins; a mounting means for pivotally mounting said guide rods to said pins for movement about a horizontal axis; and a second transition chain in said cushion holder housing associated with said horizontally extending shaft of said second electric motor for pivoting said guide rods and hence said cushion holder housing relative to said sliding pins upon actuation of said second electric motor.
4. An electrical head-rest as claimed in claim 3 wherein said first electric motor includes an elongate axis which extends vertically between said screw and one of said guide pins.
5. An electrical head-rest as claimed in claim 1 and further comprising a second electric motor having a horizontally extending shaft mounted in said cushion holder housing beneath said support base; a mounting means for pivotally mounting said guide rods to said pins for movement about a horizontal axis; and a second transition chain in said cushion holder housing associated with said horizontally extending shaft of said second electric motor for pivoting said guide rods and hence said cushion holder housing relative to said sliding pins upon actuation of said second electric motor.
6. An electrical head-rest as claimed in claim 5 wherein said second transition chain is a gearing type which is arranged to cause said second electric motor to pivot with said guide rods relative to said pins.
7. An electrical head-rest as claimed in claim 1 wherein each of said pins includes a notch therein adjacent said back-rest; and further including a seat housing located in said back-rest between said pins in which said connection base is located, and a finishing plate which covers said seat housing and which includes a closure trap which is movable to uncover said connection base, said finishing plate engaging said notches of said pins.
8. An electrical head-rest as claimed in claim 7 wherein each of said pins includes a second notch therein above a respective said first-mentioned notch; and wherein said removable fastening means includes a finishing member which is located above said finishing plate and which engages said second notches of said pins.

The present invention relates to an electric head-rest, particularly for vehicle seats, comprising removeable fastening means, of the standard separation sliding pin type, enabling its mounting on the upper portion of the back-rest of the seat, and associated with at least one electric motor connected on the one hand mechanically to a positioning transmission chain for a cushion holder housing and on the other hand, by an electric connection to control members connected to a current supply associated with said seat, within reach of the hands of its occupant.

Such a head-rest could only include a single electric motor, for example for actuating its position in height; it could however comprise a second motor, for actuating its tilt, by pivoting around a horizontal axis. By motor must be understood, in principle, a motor-potentiometer, the axle of which is coupled to the shaft of the motor so that the voltage available on its slider may provide a memory of the positioning in height or in inclination.

A head-rest of this type (DE-A-3 805 957), is already known of which the motor and the associated members (mechanical transmission and the like) are housed in the back-rest of the seat, the head-rest itself being only constituted by a cushion, provided with its two pins for fitting into the back-rest. The latter hence is heavily equipped, which systematically increases the price of the vehicles and renders the establishment of a system of options more difficult. The option "vehicles with or without electric head-rest" is converted in fact into an option "vehicles with or without specially equipped seat back-rest" (for electrical actuation of the positioning of the head-rest).

It is an object of the present invention to overcome this type of drawback and for this purpose, the head-rest of the general type defined at the beginning will be, in accordance with the present invention, essentially characterized in that each electric motor and the positioning transmission chain which is associated therewith are lodged inside said housing, and wherein said electrical connection ends in a connector adapted to be plugged onto a connection base permanently fixed to said upper portion of the back-rest, the latter only containing the portion of said electrical connection which extends between said base and said actuating members.

Thus, to the contrary of what has been encountered in the prior art mentioned above, it is now the head-rest which comprises the maximum number of members, namely the essential members and the back-rest of the seat, the minimum, namely only the electrical connections indispensable between the connection base and the actuating members. In this way a practically autonomous integral head-rest is obtained, constituting in itself alone an optional module. It is even possible, due to the invention, to contemplate mounting on all vehicules seats of which the back-rest is pre-equipped with these connection bases and electrical connections, their price then only being very little increased with respect to that of ordinary seats. Such back-rests will also enable, by the choice of the customer, to mount thereon either a conventional head-rest, with manual adjustments, or a head-rest in accordance with the invention with electrical adjustments.

From the point of view of construction, a head-rest according to the invention could also be distinguished by the following features of mounting and arrangements: it comprises, slideably mounted on two guide rods fast to said pins, a support base adapted to be fixed in said housing and supporting a first electrical motor for actuating the position in height of said base, and as the case may require its potentiometer.

Said positioning transmission chain comprises a screw-nut system and gears, the shaft of said first motor extending vertically.

This head-rest can also comprise, beneath and fast to said support base, a housing for a second electric motor, of horizontal axis, connected mechanically to said guide rods, which are respectively pivoted on the said pins along a virtual horizontal axis, for controlling the tilt of these rods with respect to said pins.

Advantageously also, the positioning transmission chain between said second electric motor and said rods is of the gear type and is arranged to cause said housing and its contents to pivot with respect to said pins.

Other details and advantages of a head-rest according to the invention will appear on reading the description which is given here below by way of purely non-limiting example, with reference to the single figure of the accompanying drawing.

The single FIGURE is an elevational front sectional view of the electric head-rest of the present invention taken through the vertical plane containing the conventional mounting pins of the head-rest.

In this FIGURE, the cushions of the head-rest have been referenced 1 and the housing which supports them at 2. This head-rest may be mounted on the upper portion of a seat back-rest 3, for example an automobile vehicle, by means of two conventional pins 4, of standard separation, constituting at the same time, for the head-rest, a rigid support structure and a reference for its positioning in height and in inclination. These pins 4 are engaged in bushings fixed to the back-rest, referenced as 5 and in which are spring caught smaller bushings 6, produced by molding with a finishing plate 7, which encloses the covering fabric of the seat 3 between itself and the sides of a shaped plate 11, constituting a housing. This plate 7 comprises a closure trap 8 moveable around an axis 9 enabling access to a connection base 10 contained in said housing 11.

Thus, to render a head-rest operational according to the invention, it suffices to open the trap 8, to plug onto said connection base 10 a connector 28 connected by internal cabling 29 to the electrical member situated inside the head-rest, to close this trap up again and then to mount the head-rest normally on the top of the back-rest, by means of its pins 4, which are spring caught at the level of the plate 7 (see height pre-adjustment notches 14).

The back-rest of the seat proper thus has only to enclose cabling (36) to establish the electrical connection between the connection base 10 and the members 37 for actuating the inclination and the height of the head-rest, which will of course be arranged within reach of the hand of the occupant of the seat (for example on the side of the seat frame). It is to be noted that this inner cabling 36 of the back-rest passes through an aperture 12 of plate 11, whilst the cabling 29 starting from the aforesaid connector 28 to go to the internal motors will pass through an aperture 13 formed at the end of the trap 8 and through an aperture 38 in a bottom finishing member 39 of head-rest 1 which engages notches 14' and to which is securely attached an upper member 40

On the pins 4 are respectively pivoted guide rods 15 and these are pivoted around pivots referenced at 16.

The first electric motor reference 17, and serving for the raising and lowering of the head-rest, is, as the associated potentiometer 18, mounted on a support base 19 fastened to the housing 2 and adapted to slide by means of sleeves 20 on the aforesaid guide rods 15. These rods 15 are joined at their upper portion by a bracing yoke 21 into which is centrally fitted a nut 22 receiving a manipulating screw 23. At the lower end of this screw, which is fitted axially with respect to the support base 19, is fitted in rotation a pinion 24 in engagement on the one hand with a pinion 25 fixed to the output shaft of the motor 17, and on the other hand, with a pinion 26 fixed to the axle of the potentiometer 18.

Thus it is understood that when the rotation of the motor 17 is actuated, in one direction or the other, from the aforesaid actuating members, the rotation of the screw 23 in the fixed nut 22 causes the base of the support 19 to ascend or descend at will as well as the housing 2 with which it is fast. When the desired position is reached, the cursor of the potentiometer 18 is at a voltage representative of this position and which can be memorized; this will permit a given occupant of the seat to retrieve immediately the position which suits him best if the adjustment has in the interval been modified by another person.

It is well understood that the motor 17 and potentiometer 18 ascend and descend at the same time as their support base 19. When the base approaches its highest position, the motor and the potentiometer pass between the branches of the fixed yoke 21, sufficiently separated from one another for this purpose.

To cause the guide rod 15 to pivot, and hence the head-rest, with respect to the pins 4, a second electric motor 30, of horizontal axis, located in a housing 31 situated beneath the support base 19 is used; the body of the motor is fixed in rotation with respect to this housing 31 and hence with respect to the base 19 and to the housing 2 of the head-rest. On the output shaft of this second motor is fastened a planetary pinion 32 in engagement with a fixed pinion 33, fast to the corresponding fixed pivot 16.

Thus, when the rotation of this second motor 30 is actuated, in one direction or the other from the actuating members which have been considered above (comprising start-stop switches, inverters of the direction of rotation of the motors, etc.), the motor and its housing 31 pivot in the corresponding direction, around the axis of the pivots 16, which permits the head-rest to be given the desired tilt. The second motor 30 is associated also with a potentiometer, reference 34, which has the same memorization role as the preceding one.

It is to be noted finally that friction washers such as 35 are mounted on pivots 16, between corresponding flanges, to permit a slight rotation of the head-rest in case of impact and to avoid a deterioration of the pinions in engagement 32 and 33.

A head-rest according to the invention has the advantage of being completely interchangeable with the conventional unmotorized head-rests, this due to the standard separation of its pins 4 and to its particularly small bulk, quite comparable with that of conventional head-rests. It integrates the totality of the active members necessary for its operation, the seat having only to receive a cabling system and actuating members. This considerably facilitates the interchangeability of the head-rest.

Whatever embodiment of the head-rest according to the invention has been described with a double electrical control, it is of course understood that the invention will still preserve its interest in the case where only the control in height would be motorized, the control in tilt remaining manual. In this case, the mechanism of the adjustment of the tilt would remain totally masked by the casing of the housing 31, instead and in place of the motor 30 and of its potentiometer 34.

Hamelin, Bruno

Patent Priority Assignee Title
10046682, Aug 03 2015 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Back cushion module for a vehicle seating assembly
10046683, Jan 23 2014 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Suspension seat back and cushion system having an inner suspension panel
10065546, Apr 02 2014 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Vehicle seating assembly with manual independent thigh supports
10166895, Jun 09 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Seatback comfort carrier
10220737, Apr 01 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Kinematic back panel
10239431, Sep 02 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Cross-tube attachment hook features for modular assembly and support
10279714, Aug 26 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Seating assembly with climate control features
10286818, Mar 16 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Dual suspension seating assembly
10286824, Aug 24 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Spreader plate load distribution
10369905, Oct 03 2014 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Tuned flexible support member and flexible suspension features for comfort carriers
10377279, Jun 09 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Integrated decking arm support feature
10391910, Sep 02 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Modular assembly cross-tube attachment tab designs and functions
10596936, May 04 2017 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Self-retaining elastic strap for vent blower attachment to a back carrier
10843610, Nov 14 2016 Toyota Jidosha Kabushiki Kaisha; Toyota Boshoku Kabushiki Kaisha Vehicle seat
10899260, Oct 05 2015 Adient US LLC Headrest of a vehicle seat
5433508, Oct 19 1993 Tachi-s Co., Ltd Powered headrest for automotive seat
5669666, Apr 06 1995 HYUNDAI MOTOR COMPANY, LTD Device and method for automatically controlling a headrest
5669667, Aug 02 1995 R. Schmidt GmbH Motor-vehicle seat headrest
5722728, Jul 16 1996 Gestind-M.B. "Manifattura di Brusolo" S.p.A. Headrest for motor vehicle seats
5788250, Mar 25 1996 Lear Corporation Headrest guide sleeve
5836651, Mar 31 1995 Brose Fahrzeugteile GmbH & Co. KG, Coburg Adjustable cross-divided backrest for vehicle seat
5924755, Mar 15 1997 Robert Bosch GmbH Adjusting device in a motor vehicle
6062644, May 29 1996 Kongsberg Automotive ASA Seat headrest
6074011, Mar 16 1998 ADIENT LUXEMBOURG HOLDING S A R L Automatic retractable head restraint
6290298, Jun 10 1998 Han Shin Industry Co., LTD Tiltable headrest for vehicle seat
6364415, Jul 29 1999 Aisin Seiki Kabushiki Kaisha Head rest for vehicle seat
6471296, Jul 31 1998 Technology Holding Company II Adjustable headrest
6543852, Jun 27 2000 Aisin Seiki Kabushiki Kaisha Headrest device
6573673, May 20 1998 BROSE FAHRZEUGTEILE GMBH & CO KG , COBURG ADJUSTABLE VEHICLE SEAT WITH HORIZONTAL SEAT ADJUSTMENT AND/OR SEAT HEIGHT ADJUSTMENT AND/OR SEAT DEPTH ADJUSTMENT AND NECK-REST THAT CAN BE DISPLACED BY AN ELECTRIC MOTOR AND GUIDED BY A SENSOR SYSTEM INFLUENCED BY THE SIZE OF THE USER
6860564, Jan 31 2001 Intier Automotive Inc Vehicular seat assembly having a cam driven self positioning head restraint
7121625, Dec 30 2002 Lear Corporation Headrest mechanism
7665693, Aug 27 2004 Safran Seats GB Limited Aircraft seat
8042415, Mar 19 2008 Aisin Seiki Kabushiki Kaisha Motion converting drive mechanism and vehicle seat apparatus including the same
8459745, Oct 20 2010 Dr. Ing. h.c.F. Porsche Aktiengesellschaft Backrest of a motor vehicle seat
9061614, Mar 28 2011 Lear Corporation Height adjustable head restraints for vehicle seats
9061616, Jan 24 2013 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Articulating headrest assembly
9315129, Aug 17 2011 Grammer AG Vehicle interior fitting
9315130, Nov 11 2013 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Articulating head restraint
9333887, Jun 26 2014 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Power articulating headrest assembly
9365140, Aug 13 2012 SCHUKRA BERNDORF GMBH Headrest system and method of adjusting a headrest
9487114, Aug 13 2012 SCHUKRA BERNDORF GMBH Headrest system and method of adjusting a headrest
9527414, Jun 26 2014 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Power articulating headrest assembly
9649962, Jan 24 2013 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Independent cushion extension and thigh support
9707870, Jan 24 2013 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Flexible seatback system
9707873, Jan 24 2013 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Flexible seatback system
9802512, Apr 12 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Torsion spring bushing
9834166, Jun 07 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Side airbag energy management system
9845029, Jun 06 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Passive conformal seat with hybrid air/liquid cells
9849817, Mar 16 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Composite seat structure
9849856, Jun 07 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Side airbag energy management system
9873360, Jan 24 2013 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Flexible seatback system
9873362, Jan 24 2013 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Flexible seatback system
9889773, Apr 04 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Anthropomorphic upper seatback
9914378, Dec 16 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Decorative and functional upper seatback closeout assembly
9994135, Mar 30 2016 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Independent cushion thigh support
Patent Priority Assignee Title
3572834,
4222608, Dec 30 1977 Nissan Motor Company, Limited Control system for adjustable head restraint on automotive seat
4466662, Nov 12 1981 The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Air Powered articulated headrest system
4976493, Feb 27 1989 CECIL, DIMITRIOS G Vehicle headrest post guide
DE3519351,
DE3545142,
//
Executed onAssignorAssigneeConveyanceFrameReelDoc
Jul 29 1991Bertrand Faure Automobile(assignment on the face of the patent)
Sep 16 1991HAMELIN, BRUNOBERTRAND FAURE AUTOMIBLEASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST 0058600749 pdf
Date Maintenance Fee Events
Jul 22 1993ASPN: Payor Number Assigned.
Feb 04 1997REM: Maintenance Fee Reminder Mailed.
Jun 29 1997EXP: Patent Expired for Failure to Pay Maintenance Fees.


Date Maintenance Schedule
Jun 29 19964 years fee payment window open
Dec 29 19966 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Jun 29 1997patent expiry (for year 4)
Jun 29 19992 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4)
Jun 29 20008 years fee payment window open
Dec 29 20006 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Jun 29 2001patent expiry (for year 8)
Jun 29 20032 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8)
Jun 29 200412 years fee payment window open
Dec 29 20046 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Jun 29 2005patent expiry (for year 12)
Jun 29 20072 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12)